One thing to definitely NOT do is to install any of the "anti-malware" tools that you're urged to when you get to a web page that says "Your computer is infected by a virus!" These are almost certainly malware themselves. You must only use tools that are well-vetted -- (presumably) those named below or on another trusted site.
–
Daniel R HicksJan 13 '13 at 23:11

9

For anyone just coming to this question wanting the tl;dr version... Once infected, there is no way (well... no way that doesn't involve you already being a computer engineer, and investing a few years of your life to performing a digital autopsy on the machine) to get rid of / be sure you've gotten rid of an infection. Malware can hide in your files, your application programs, your operating systems, firmware... Which is why you should never trust a computer that has had an infection. AV vendors will try to convince you their product is the silver bullet that will fix your system. They lie.
–
Parthian ShotJul 29 '14 at 21:34

17 Answers
17

Here's the thing: Malware in recent years has become both sneakier and nastier:

Sneakier, because it travels in packs. Subtle malware can hide behind more obvious infections. There are lots of good tools listed in answers here that can find 99% of malware, but there's always that 1% they can't find yet. Mostly, that 1% is stuff that is new: the malware tools can't find it because it just came out and is using some new exploit or technique to hide itself that the tools don't know about yet. The anti-malware tools still have their place, but I'll get to that later.

Malware also has a short shelf-life. If you're infected, something from that new 1% is very likely to be one part of your infection. It won't be the whole infection: just a part of it. Security tools will help you find and remove the more obvious and well-known malware, and most likely remove all of the visible symptoms (because you can keep digging until you get that far), but they can leave little pieces behind, like a keylogger or rootkit.

Nastier, in that it won't just show ads, install a toolbar, or use your computer as a zombie anymore. Modern malware is likely to go right for the banking or credit card information. The people building this stuff are motivated by profit, and if they can't steal from you directly, they'll look for something they can turn around and sell. This might be processing or network resources in your computer, but it might also be your social security number.

Put these two factors together, and it's no longer worthwhile to even attempt to remove malware from an installed operating system. I used to be very good at removing this stuff, to the point where I made a significant part of my living that way, and I no longer even make the attempt. I'm not saying it can't be done, but I am saying that the cost/benefit and risk analysis results have changed: it's just not worth it anymore. There's too much at stake, and it's too easy to get results that only seem to be effective.

Lots of people will disagree with me on this, but I challenge they are not weighing consequences of failure strongly enough. Are you willing to wager your life savings, your good credit, even your identity, that you're better at this than crooks who make millions doing it every day? If you try to remove malware and then keep running the old system, that's exactly what you're doing.

I know there are people out there reading this thinking, "Hey, I've removed several infections from various machines and nothing bad ever happened." I suggest you need to add "yet" to the end of that statement. You might be 99% effective, but you only have to be wrong one time, and the consequences of failure are much higher than they once were. You might even have a machine already out there that still has a ticking time bomb inside, just waiting to be activated or to collect the right information before reporting it back. Even if you have a 100% effective process now, this stuff changes all the time. Remember: you have to be perfect every time; the bad guys only have to get lucky once.

In summary, it's unfortunate, but if you have a confirmed malware infection, a complete re-pave of the computer should be the first place you turn instead of the last.

Here's how to accomplish that:

Before you're infected, make sure you have a way to re-install any purchased software, including the operating system, that does not depend on anything stored on your internal hard disk. For this purpose, that normally just means hanging onto cd/dvds or product keys1, but the operating system may require you to create recovery disks yourself. Don't rely on a recovery partition for this. If you wait until after an infection to ensure you have what you need to re-install, you may find yourself paying for the same software again.

If you suspect you have malware, look to other answers here. There are a lot of good tools suggested. My only issue is the best way to use them: I only rely on them for the detection. Install and run the tool, but as soon as it finds evidence of a real infection (more than just "tracking cookies") just stop the scan: the tool has done its job and confirmed your infection.

Now, at the time of a confirmed infection, take the following steps:

Check your credit and bank accounts. By the time you find out about the infection, real damage may have already been done. Take any steps necessary to secure your cards, bank account, and identity. Change passwords at any web site you accessed from the compromised computer. Do not use the compromised computer to do any of this.

Take a backup of your data (even better if you already have one).

Re-install the operating system using disks shipped with the computer, purchased separately, or the recovery disk you should have created when the computer was new. Make sure the re-install includes a complete re-format of your disk.

Re-install your applications.

Make sure your operating system and software is fully patched and up to date.

Run a complete anti-virus scan to clean the backup from step two.

Restore the backup.

If done properly, this is likely to take between two and six real hours of your time, spread out over two to three days (or even longer) while you wait for things like apps to install, windows updates to download, or large backup files to transfer... but it's better than finding out later that crooks drained your bank account. Unfortunately, this is something you should do yourself, or a have a techy friend do for you. At a typical consulting rate of around $100/hr, it can be cheaper to buy a new machine than pay a shop to do this. If you have a friend do it for you, do something nice to show your appreciation. Even geeks who love helping you set up new things or fix broken hardware often hate the tedium of clean-up work. It's also best if you take your own backup... your friends aren't going to know where you put what files, or which ones are really important to you. You're in a better position to take a good backup than they are.

Soon even all of this may not be enough, as there is now malware capable of infecting firmware. Even replacing the hard drive may not remove the infection, and buying a new computer will be the only option. Thankfully, at the time I'm writing this we're not to that point yet, but it's definitely on the horizon and approaching fast.

If you absolutely insist, beyond all reason, that you really want to clean your existing install rather than start over, then for the love of God make sure that whatever method you use involves one of the following two procedures:

Remove the hard drive and connect it as a guest disk in a different (clean!) computer to run the scan.

OR

Boot from a CD/USB key with its own set of tools running its own kernel. Make sure the image for was obtained and burned on a clean computer. If necessary, have a friend make the disk for you.

Under no circumstances should you try to clean an infected operating system using software running as a guest process of the compromised operating system. That's just plain dumb.

Of course, the best way to fix an infection is to avoid it in the first place, and there are some things you can do to help with that:

Keep your system patched. Make sure you promptly install Windows Updates, Adobe Updates, Java Updates, Apple Updates, etc. This is far more important even than anti-virus software, and for the most part it's not that hard, as long as you keep current. Most of those companies have informally settled on all releasing new patches on the same day each month, so if you keep current it doesn't interrupt you that often.

Do not run as administrator by default. In recent versions of Windows, that is as simple as leaving the UAC feature turned on.

Use a good firewall tool. These days the default firewall in Windows is actually good enough. You may want to supplement this layer with something like WinPatrol that helps stop malicious activity on the front end. Windows Defender works in this capacity to some extent as well.

Run current anti-virus software. This is a distant fourth to the first three, as traditional A/V software often just isn't that effective anymore. It's also important to emphasize the "current". You could have the best antivirus software in the world, but if it's not up to date, you may just as well uninstall it. For this reason, I currently recommend Microsoft Security Essentials. (Since Windows 8, Microsoft Security Essentials is part of Windows Defender.) There are likely far better scanning engines out there, but Security Essentials will keep itself up to date, without ever risking an expired registration. AVG and Avast also work well in this way. I just can't recommend any anti-virus software you have to actually pay for, because it's just far too common that a paid subscription lapses and you end up with out-of-date definitions. It's also worth noting here that Mac users should also run antivirus software. The days when they could get away without it are long gone.

Avoid warez, pirated software, and pirated movies/videos. This stuff is often injected with malware by the person who cracked or posted it — not always, but often enough to avoid the whole mess. It's part of why a cracker would do this: often they will get a cut of any profits.

Use your head when browsing the web. If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is. The most obvious download button is rarely the one you want to use any more when downloading new software, so make sure to read and understand everything on the web page before you click that link.

1 You should also backup your data, but that's really a separate issue: if your system security was compromised, your backups are likely compromised, too.

This seems to be the wisest, nowadays, indeed. I would add that there is another reason for some malware to be sneaky: they will remain dormant, and use your computer for other activities. Could be proxying, storing things more or less illegal, or be a part of a DDOS attack.
–
GnoupiNov 30 '12 at 15:23

2

@DanielRHicks read the full sentence. It's two to six hours of your time, spread over a day or three where you are efficient about kicking something off and checking back later. If you're baby-sitting everything, then yeah: it's gonna take a while.
–
Joel CoehoornDec 5 '12 at 22:21

3

I strongly agree with this. I have an image with all my apps and stuff pre installed.
–
Taylor GibbDec 26 '12 at 21:45

1

@JoelCoehoorn Is it just me, or malware this advanced would also infect firmware on all kinds of components making any removal effort futile?
–
Enis P. AginićOct 6 '14 at 11:33

A bit of theory first: please realize that there is no substitute for understanding.

The ultimate antivirus is to understand what you are doing and generally what is going on with your system, with your own mind and in the so-called reality.

No amount of software or hardware will fully protect you from yourself and from your own actions which in most cases is how the malware gets into a system in the first place.

Most modern "production level" malware, adware and spyware rely on various "social engineering" tricks to fool you into installing "useful" apps, add-ons, browser toolbars, 'virus scanners' or clicking big green Download buttons which will install malware on your machine.

Even an installer for a supposedly trusted app, such as e.g. uTorrent, would install by default adware and possibly spyware if you simply click the Next button, and don't take the time to read what all the checkboxes mean.

The best way to fight the social engineering tricks that hackers use is reverse social engineering - if you master this technique you will manage to avoid most types of threats and keep your system clean and healthy even without an antivirus or firewall.

If you have noticed signs of malicious/unsolicited life forms inhabiting your system the only clean solution would be to fully reformat and reinstall your system. Make a backup as described in other answers here, quick format the discs and reinstall your system, or, even better, move the useful data to some external storage, and re-image the system partition from a clean partition dump you have made earlier.

Some computers have a BIOS option to revert the system to the original factory settings. Even if this might seem a bit of an overkill, it will never hurt and, more importantly, this will solve all the other eventual issues, whether you are aware of them or not, without having to handle each issue one by one.

The best way to 'fix' a compromised system is to not fix it at all, but instead revert to a known 'good' snapshot using some kind of partition imaging software, such as Paragon Disk Manager, Paragon HDD Manager, Acronys Disk Manager, or e.g. dd if you made the backup from Linux.

How can I tell if my PC is infected?

Random failures and things happening when they shouldn't (e.g. some new viruses put group policy restrictions on your machine to prevent task manager or other diagnostic programs from running).

Task manager shows a high CPU when you think your machine should be idle (e.g. <5%).

Adverts popping up at random.

Virus warnings popping up from an antivirus you don't remember installing (the antivirus program is a fake and tries to claim you have scary sounding viruses with names like 'bankpasswordstealer.vir'. You're encouraged to pay for this program to clean these).

Internet pages redirected or blocked, for example, home pages of AV products or support sites (www.symantec.com, www.avg.com, www.microsoft.com) are redirected to sites filled with adverts, or fake sites promoting bogus anti virus / "helpful" removal tools, or are blocked altogether.

Increased startup time, when you have not been installing any applications (or patches)... This one is awkward.

Anything out the blue, if you "know" your system, you typically know when something is very wrong.

How do I get rid of this?

Using a Live CD

Since the infected PC's virus scanner might be compromised, it's probably safer to scan the drive from a Live CD. The CD will boot a specialized operating system on your computer, which will then scan the hard drive.

Connecting the hard drive to another PC

If you are connecting the infected hard drive to a clean system in order to scan it, make sure that you update the virus definitions for all the products that you will be using to scan the infected drive. Waiting a week to let the antivirus providers release new virus definitions can improve your chances of detecting all the viruses.

Make sure your infected system remains disconnected from the internet while it is infected. This will prevent it from being able to download new editions of viruses (among other things).

Start with a good tool such as Spybot Search and Destroy or Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware and perform a full scan. Also try ComboFix, and SuperAntiSpyware. No single antivirus product will have every virus definition. Using multiple products is key (not for real time protection). If even just one virus remains on the system, it may be able to download and install all the latest editions of new viruses and all the effort so far would have been for nothing.

Remove suspicious programs from boot

Start up in safe mode.

Use msconfig to determine what programs and services start at boot (or startup under task manager in Windows 8).

If there are programs/services that are suspicious, remove them from the boot. Else skip to using a live CD.

Restart.

If the symptoms do not go away and/or the program replaces itself at startup, try using a program called Autoruns to find the program, and remove it from there. If your computer cannot start up, Autoruns has a feature where it can be run from a second PC called "Analyse offline PC". Pay especially close attention to the Logon and Scheduled tasks tabs.

If there is still no success in removing the program, and you are sure that it is the cause of your problems, boot into regular mode, and install a tool called Unlocker

Navigate to the location of the file that is that virus, and attempt to use unlocker to kill it. A few things may happen:

The file is deleted, and does not reappear on restart. This is the best case.

The file is deleted, but immediately reappears. In this case, use a program called Process Explorer to find out the program that re-created the file. You will need to delete that program as well.

The file cannot be deleted, unlocker will prompt you to delete it on reboot. Do that, and see if it reappears. If it does, you must have a program in boot that causes that to happen, and re-examine the list of programs that run in boot.

What to do after restoring

Now it should be safe (hopefully) to boot into your (previously) infected system. Still, keep your eyes open for signs of infection. A virus can leave changes on a computer that would make it easier to re-infect even after the virus has been removed.

For example, if a virus changed DNS or proxy settings, your computer would redirect you to fake versions of legitimate websites, so that downloading what appears to be a well-known and trusted program could actually be downloading a virus.

They could also get your passwords by redirecting you to fake bank account sites or fake email sites. Be sure to check your DNS and proxy settings. In most cases, your DNS should be provided by your ISP or automatically acquired by DHCP. Your proxy settings should be disabled.

Check your hosts file (\%systemroot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts) for any suspicious entries and remove them immediately. Also make sure your firewall is enabled and that you have all the latest Windows updates.

What to do if everything fails

It should be noted that some malware is very good at avoiding scanners. It's possible that once you are infected, it can install rootkits or similar to stay invisible. If things are really bad, the only option is to wipe the disk and reinstall the operating system from scratch. Sometimes a scan using GMER or Kaspersky's TDSS Killer can show you if you have a rootkit.

You may want to do a few runs of Spybot Search and Destroy. If after three runs it is unable to remove an infestation (and you fail to do it manually) consider a re-install.

Another suggestion: Combofix is a very powerful removal tool when rootkits prevent other things from running or installing.

Using multiple scan engines can certainly help to find malwares best hidden, but it's a fastidious task and a good backup/restore strategy will be more efficient and secure.

One suggestion is that many of these malware programs do steal passwords and bank data, so it's not a bad idea to disconnect from the internet once you do become suspicious of an infection. It very well may be too late, but there's a chance you'll limit data leaks, or prevent the malware from updating itself, until such time as you are successful in your cleaning.
–
emgeeApr 15 '11 at 21:26

2

@emgee Good rule of thumb on data exfiltration: when in doubt, pull it out (the ethernet plug)
–
Nate KoppenhaverAug 4 '11 at 17:17

5

Combofix.org is not the official download location of Combofix, and is not authorized or recommended by Combofix's author. The official download is here.
–
Andrew LambertDec 14 '11 at 19:13

There are some great malware-fighting tips in Jeff Atwood's "How to Clean Up a Windows Spyware Infestation". Here's the basic process (be sure to read through the blog post for screenshots and other details that this summary glosses over):

Kill any processes that don't have a Company Name (excluding DPCs, Interrupts, System, and System Idle Process), or that have Company Names that you don't recognize.

Stop the spyware from restarting the next time the system is booted. Again, Windows' builtin tool, MSconfig, is a partial solution, but Sysinternals AutoRuns is the tool to use.

Run AutoRuns.

Go through the entire list. Uncheck suspicious entries -- those with blank Publisher names or any Publisher name you don't recognize.

Now reboot.

After rebooting, recheck with Process Explorer and AutoRuns. If something "comes back", you'll have to dig deeper.

In Jeff's example, one something that came back was a suspicious driver entry in AutoRuns. He talks through tracking down the process that loaded it in Process Explorer, closing the handle, and physically deleting the rogue driver.

He also found an oddly-named DLL file hooking into the Winlogon process, and demonstrates finding and killing the process threads loading that DLL so that AutoRuns can finally remove the entries.

Also, Trend Micro HijackThis is a free utility that generates an in depth report of registry and file settings from your computer. I will warn this finds good and bad stuff, and makes no distinction, but Google is our friend if we're suspicious.
–
Umber FerruleJun 24 '11 at 20:33

1

Sysinternals Process Explorer link is Dead. These answers are on some google top findings. Can someone update this with an updated link? I'm also looking for it.
–
MalavosDec 23 '14 at 15:01

I do not think that AV programs such as MSE, MCAfee, Norton, Kaspersky, etc. can protect you 100% because their definition files always come after the fact - after the malware is already out there on the web and can have done a lot of damage. And many of those do not protect you against PUPs and Adware.

I also do not think that the scanners like Malwarbytes, Superantispyware, Bitdefender scanner and others can help a lot when the malware has already damaged your system. If you have enough scanners, you will be able to remove the malware but you will not be able to repair the damage that this malware has done.

I therefore have developed a two layer strategy:

I make weekly images (I use free Macrium) of my system partition and my data partition to two external disks that are only connected during the imaging. Thus no malware can get to them. Should something not work in my system, I can always restore the latest image. I usually keep half a dozen full images in case I have to go back further than last week. In addition I have system restore enabled in my OS so that I can quickly set back in case of a faulty update. But system images (shadows) are not very reliable because they can disappear for various reasons. Relying on system images alone does not suffice.

Most of my internet work I do from a virtual Linux partition. Linux itself is not the target of malware and Windows malware cannot effect Linux. With that system I do

all my downloads and checking them with Virus Total before I move them to the Windows system. Virus Total runs the file thru 60 of the best known AV programs and if it comes out clean, chances are very high that it is clean.

all internet access to websites where I am not 100% certain that they are clean - like e.g. this website here.

all my mail. That is the advantage of Gmail and AOL. I can check my mail with my browser. Here I can open any piece of mail without being afraid to get a virus. And attachments I run thru Virus Total.

all my on-line banking. Linux provides me with an extra layer of security

With this approach I have not seen any malware in years. If you like to try a virtual Linux partition, here is how.

Yeah I could do that. But then this whole thread is also about malware avoidance strategies. My approach is to be ahead of the game and avoid any infections in the first place. If that is not a desired answer, then they might as well remove it. I am in the process of writing a tutorial about the whole matter anyhow.
–
whsMar 24 at 0:24

Virus Removal Tool is a utility designed to remove all types of infections from your computer. It employs the effective detection algorithms used by Kaspersky Anti-Virus and AVZ. It cannot substitute a resident antivirus application.

On December 8th 2012. Remove-Malware released a video tutorial entitled "Remove Malware Free 2013 Edition" together with a complementary Guide outlining how to get rid of malware from your infected PC for free.

They outline

Backup – How to backup up your important personal documents just in-case your PC become inaccessible.

Gathering the needed software for this guide.

Bootable Antivirus – Why bootable antivirus is the best way to remove malware.

A very informative article written today 1st February 2013 by J. Brodkin entitled "Viruses, Trojans, and worms, oh my: The basics on malware
Mobile malware may be trendy, but PC malware is still the big problem." from arstechnica.com highlights the continual problem of malware & different types of malware with explanations of each, highlighting:

Backdoors

Remote Access Trojans

Information stealers

Ransomware

The article also highlights the spreading of malware, botnet operation and businesses under attack.

As suggested before in this topic, if you ARE SURE you are infected, use a linux live CD to boot your computer and immediately backup all your sensitive data.

It is also a good practice to have your sensitive files stored in a hard drive different from your OS boot drive. this way you can safely format the infected system and run a comprehensive scan on your sensitive data just to be on the safe side.

As a matter of fact, there is no best solution than to format the system partition to make sure you run a virus and malware free environment.
Even if you run a good tool (and no doubt there are many out there), there are always leftovers left behind and your system may seem clean at the moment, but it surely becomes a time-bomb awaiting to explode later.

Don't get infected in the first place. Use a good firewall and antivirus, and practice "safe computing" -- stay away from questionable sites and avoid downloading stuff when you don't know where it's coming from.

Be aware that many sites on the web will tell you you're "infected" when you aren't -- they want to trick you into buying their junky anti-spyware, or, worse, they want you do download stuff that is, in fact, spyware disguised as a "free antispyware application". Similarly, be aware that many on this site, mostly out of stupidity, will diagnose any "odd" error, particularly the sort of registry corruption that Windows is famous for, as signs of spyware.

With Reference to William Hilsum "How Do I Get Rid Of This: Using A Live CD" above:
A virus wont be able to run in a live CD environment, so you can make temporary use of your computer without fear of further infection. Best of all you can access all your files. On June 20th 2011 Justin Pot wrote a booklet entitled "50 Cool Uses for Live CDs". The beginning of the booklet explains how to boot from CD, Flash Drive or SD Card, and pages 19-20 explain about scanning with different "antimalwares" some that were already mentioned. The advice given is invaluable for this scenario, and is explained in easy to understand english. Of course the rest of the booklet is invaluable for your other computing needs. (the link to the download (in pdf format) is provided from the link below. Always remember to be sensible when using the internet, dont be tempted to stray to "places" where malware is very likely to be lurking, and you should be fine. Any Antivirus, Internet Security Suites etc that you maybe using should have the latest updates, and whichever OS you maybe using should also be kept up to date.

On a PC that is not infected, make a boot AV disc then boot from the disc on the Infected PC and scan the hard drive, remove any infections it finds. I prefer the Windows Defender Offline boot CD/USB because it can remove boot sector viruses, see "Note" below.

After you have scanned and removed malware using the boot disc, Install free MBAM, run the program and go to the Update tab and update it, then go to the Scanner Tab and do a quick scan, select and remove anything it finds.

When MBAM is done install SAS free version, run a quick scan, remove what it automatically selects.

In some instances you may have to run a startup repair (Windows Vista and Windows7 only) to get it booting properly again. In extreme cases 3 startup repairs in a row may be needed.

MBAM and SAS are not AV softwares like Norton, they are on demand scanners that only scan for nasties when you run the program and will not interfere with your installed AV, these can be run once a day or week to ensure you are not infected. Be sure you update them before each daily-weekly scan.

Note: that the Windows Defender Offline product is very good at removing persistent MBR infections which are common these days.

Having a second pc dedicated to virus scanning is probably the best solution, as you don't rely on the infected drive for your system. However, besides computer support firms, I doubt many people have such ready solution.
–
GnoupiJun 28 '10 at 8:42

2

If no dedicated PC is available, a similar procedure can be carried out by booting the system with a live CD
–
Ophir YoktanMar 18 '11 at 19:28

The problem with scanning malware externally or with a live CD is that many of these nasty pieces of software hook into memory processes, drivers and much more. If the PC's operating system is not loaded neither are they which makes for a frustrating removal process. ALWAYS scan for malware while the infected OS is booted.

With that said, load up Windows with a copy of RKILL on a USB drive. Running this utility kills any malware process chugging away in the background, allowing you to do move forward with the removal. It is VERY effective. I have yet to run into a situation where the program has failed its job and I'm surprised at how many techs have never heard of it.

Next I choose to scan with either Malware bytes or ComboFix. The nice perk about these scanners is rather than utilizing virus definitions, they locate malware relentlessly based on behavior - a very effective technique. A word of warning though - they are also much more dangerous and can REALLY wreck some serious shop on your OS. Make sure you have a backup.

90 percent of the time the above process works for me and I remove a TON of these things on the daily. If your extra paranoid, running a scan with something like AVG, SuperAntiSpyware or Microsoft Security Essentials may not be a bad idea. Although I haven't seen these programs detect much more than the harmless tracker cookie, some people swear by them. Give yourself the peace of mind and do it if you must.

ALWAYS scan for malware while the infected OS is booted...that's kinda like saying Always fight the enemy while they're paying attention. If your malware scanner can't find the malicious code while it's at rest in a file, it doesn't stand a chance against the code while it's in memory able to perform it's voodoo cloaking stunts.
–
TwistyNov 1 '14 at 1:36

There is a wide variety of malware. Some of it is trivial to find and remove. Some of it is trickier. Some of it is really difficult to find, and very hard to remove.

But even if you have a mild malware you should strongly consider reformating and reinstalling the OS. This is because your security has already failed, and if it failed for a simple malware maybe you're already infected with a vicious malware.

People working with sensitive data or inside networks where sensitive data is held should strongly consider wipe and re-install. People whose time is valuable should strongly consider wipe and re-install (it's quickest and easiest and surest method). People who are not comfortable with advanced tools should strongly consider wipe and re-install.

But people who have the time, and enjoy noodling around, can try methods listed in other posts.

Another tool I would like to add to the discussion is the Microsoft Safety Scanner. It was just released a few months ago. It is a bit like the Malicious Software Removal Tool, but designed for offline use. It will have the latest definitions as of the moment you download it and will only be useable for 10 days as it will consider its definitions file "too old to use". Download it with another computer and run this in safe mode. It works pretty well.

If you notice any of the symptoms then one thing to check is the DNS settings on your network connection.

If these have been changed either from "Obtain DNS server address automatically" or to a different server from the one it should be, then that's a good sign that you have an infection. This will be the cause of the redirects away from anti-malware sites, or a complete failure to reach the site at all.

It's probably a good idea to take a note of your DNS settings before an infection occurs so you know what they should be. Also the details will be available on the help pages of your ISP's web site.

While resetting the DNS won't fix the problem it will allow you to a) reach the anti-malware sites to get the software you need to clean the PC and b) spot if the infection recurs as the DNS settings will change again.

The possible solutions for a virus infection are in order: (1) antivirus scans, (2) system repair, (3) total reinstall.

Make first sure that all your data is backed up.

Load and install some antiviruses, make sure they are up to date, and scan deeply your hard disk. I recommend using at least Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware. I also like Avast.

If that doesn't work for any reason, you may use a rescue live-CD virus scanner : I like best Avira AntiVir Rescue System because it gets updated several times a day and so the download CD is up-to-date. As a boot CD it's autonomous and doesn't work using your Windows system.

If no virus is found, use "sfc /scannow" to repair important Windows files.
See this article.

When infected with a recent virus/trojan I used Knoppix on a USB stick, ran apt-get wine, installed Dr Web Cure-It in my wine session, and ran that to clean my infection. I had to do it this way because my laptop wouldn't boot some of the other live-CD alternatives.
–
PP.Feb 24 '10 at 17:15